| Continuo | ‖n. [ It. ] (Mus.) Basso continuo, or continued bass. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Continuous | a. [ L. continuus, fr. continere to hold together. See Continent. ] he can hear its continuous murmur. Longfellow. [ 1913 Webster ]
|
| Continuously | adv. In a continuous maner; without interruption. -- |
| continuous | (adj) continuing in time or space without interruption; - James Jeans, Syn. uninterrupted, Ant. discontinuous, Example: a continuous rearrangement of electrons in the solar atoms results in the emission of light; a continuous bout of illness lasting six months; lived in continuous fear; a continuous row of warehouses; a continuous line has no gaps or breaks in it; moving midweek holidays to the nearest Monday or Friday allows uninterrupted work weeks |
| continuous | (adj) of a function or curve; extending without break or irregularity, Ant. discontinuous |
| continuously | (adv) at every point, Example: The function is continuously differentiable |
| continuousness | (n) the quality of something that continues without end or interruption, Syn. ceaselessness, incessantness, incessancy |